Great point. I have some Prometheus Rising in my stash and plan on using a product with L-Dopa in it during that run.

I'm not sure I've seen any reviews on it...seem good?

DAA & Agmatine are solid...just seems you could get those in bulk for less $ that last longer than the benefits of what Coleus Forskohii & R-ALA would provide for the 20 servings the bottle would give...?

DAA & Agmatine are solid...just seems you could get those in bulk for less $ that last longer than the benefits of what Coleus Forskohii & R-ALA would provide for the 20 servings the bottle would give...?

I agree here 100%.
I would much rather spend the money on SNS DAA and SNS Agmatine. In my opinion this is a much better option for the price and will provide more than 20 servings.

(This may be overly cautious, but I would rather that when the safety studies are not entirely conclusive)

How would L-DOPA help any safety issues? I assume you're talking about the DAA. Could you please link me to the safety studies too?

If DAA caused excitotoxicity (which I still don't believe it does), adding L-Dopa could actually increase chances of excitotoxicity. Dopamine acts on D1 and D2 classes of receptors and they do different things. One of those things is potentiating NMDA receptor activation, which would amplify this theorized effect.

I guess I just find it odd that there is this big scare over DAA, an exogenous agonist, but randomly supplementing with L-DOPA and GABA doesn't have anybody worried when dopamine and GABA are endogenous neurotransmitters held in a natural homeostatic ratio throughout the body. I'm not saying that there are dangers with L-DOPA(the L-DOPA sold as a supplement, not the L-DOPA given to Parkinson's patients) and GABA. In fact I think supplementing both is safe, but if I had to choose which ones to look a lot closer at, it would be those two.

How would L-DOPA help any safety issues? I assume you're talking about the DAA. Could you please link me to the safety studies too?

If DAA caused excitotoxicity (which I still don't believe it does), adding L-Dopa could actually increase chances of excitotoxicity. Dopamine acts on D1 and D2 classes of receptors and they do different things. One of those things is potentiating NMDA receptor activation, which would amplify this theorized effect.

I guess I just find it odd that there is this big scare over DAA, an exogenous agonist, but randomly supplementing with L-DOPA and GABA doesn't have anybody worried when dopamine and GABA are endogenous neurotransmitters held in a natural homeostatic ratio throughout the body. I'm not saying that there are dangers with L-DOPA(the L-DOPA sold as a supplement, not the L-DOPA given to Parkinson's patients) and GABA. In fact I think supplementing both is safe, but if I had to choose which ones to look a lot closer at, it would be those two.

It could help prevent possible sides associated with an increased Prolactin level